Friday, October 19, 2007

McIlhenny's Gold: How a Louisiana Family Built the Tabasco Empire

Never again will I be able to pick up that little bottle of Tabasco sauce and sprinkle a few drops on whatever I am eating, something I have done several times a week for a few decades now , without thinking of the amazing set of circumstances that came together to put that distinctive little bottle on my table.Sometimes the little diamond-shaped label on the front of the bottle, the one that still mentions Avery Island as being its home, would catch my eye and make me wonder how such a unique product could have been born in such an isolated place and how it managed to survive long enough to become a product recognized around the world.Jeffrey Rothfeder’s new book, McIlhenny’s Gold, provides the answers to all of my questions.

Rothfeder tells the story of a remarkable family, one that literally rose from the ashes of the Civil War to create a hugely successful business based on the sale of a single food product, a business that is still well known some 140 years later.In his research of the McIlhenny family, Rothfeder found that much of what has come to be accepted about the family’s history and the origin of Tabasco sauce is simply untrue.So many myths surround the family and its product, in fact, that even family members have found it difficult to separate fact from fiction.

When Edmund McIlhenny, fifty years old at the end of the Civil War, and prior to the war a successful New Orleans banker, returned to Louisiana in 1865 he found that the Avery family he had married into was largely destitute.The family’s rich sugar cane plantation was no more and the only thing of value still in family hands was Petit Anse, the little island that was later to be renamed AveryIsland.

Edmund McIlhenny was a businessman, not a farmer.As a pre-war banker, he learned to market himself personally to such a degree that he became the best known and most sought after financial man in New Orleans.His marketing skills, and his willingness to bend the truth when it made for a better story, have made it difficult to determine exactly when he became aware of the chili pepper from Mexico’s Tabasco region and how he decided to make hot sauce the new family business.What is clear, however, is that he made the right decision and that he created a business that has served his family well for four generations.

The McIlhenny product has been a high quality one from the beginning.The three-year chili paste aging process and the inability to use mechanized pickers to gather the delicate chili peppers requires that manufacturing costs, especially labor costs, be controlled as tightly as possible.That concern led to the near recreation of the plantation system on Avery Island, a company town so complete with free shelter, medical care, schools and churches that white employees had little reason to ever leave little Avery Island.McIlhenny Co. workers, almost guaranteed a job for life, became extremely loyal to the company that provided them with everything they needed.This system lasted until a few years ago and was key to the company’s success.

McIlhenny Co., still based on the sale of a single product, has become a $250 million per year business but it is facing difficult times because one of its previous strengths has turned into its greatest weakness.The company has always been run by a member of the McIlhenny family and for three generations the family was blessed to have a family member ready to take on the job and to do it adequately, if not always completely well.But, as almost always happens in a closely held family business, future generations do not always see things through the eyes of its founder.McIlhenny Co. is at a historical crossroads and its future will be determined by a generation of McIlhennys who may decide that it is time finally to sell the company to the highest bidder rather than make the effort to keep it the tightly controlled family business that it has been for more than 140 years.

Jeffrey Rothfeder has written a well-researched history, complete with interviews of many McIlhenny family members and key employees, a history that tells the story of a fascinating family and business.McIlhenny Co. may not serve as a blueprint for future businesses, but it is hard to argue with what the company has achieved across parts of three centuries.

As a matter of fact, Sam, he didn't interview ANY members of the McIlhenny family. Care to differ? Go ahead and look it up yourself. There are references to "Gay unions and vegetarianism, ideas that are taboo in much of Louisiana . . . are openly practiced in New Iberia." What? Has this guy ever even been to New Iberia? He mixes up the brothers, fouls up the dates, and makes a very broad claim that McIlhenny and his heirs basically own Avery Island out of generations of deceipt. Never has, and still to this day, the McIlhenny family nor the Tabasco company owned the island. It remains in the established foundation of the original owners, the Avery family, and their heirs. The errors are both minor and major in nature, but they all add up to one thing: Rothfeder had to rely on second-hand info at best, and in some cases no info at all, to produce this fiction. You'll get more factual information by simply looking at the Louisiana archives.

Need more on this travesty? Or would you prefer to move on to Rothfeder himself? I'm more concerned with the blatant falsehoods he's put out against the McIlhenny clan, but he's got his own questionable history himself. Please look up CNBC, Business Week, and, my favorite, "his" book about tobacco when he was at Bloomberg. Nuff said.

OK, rcr, help me out here. I don't have the book in the house anymore because I've loaned it out to a friend. I remember numerous and lengthy quotes that were attributed to members of the family...where did those come from? Even if the author did not get them in direct interviews, why are they not legitimate as statements from the family?

I remember, too, that the book is footnoted and I'll check them again when I get the book back.

I didn't see the book at all as something that trashed the family and, in fact, I came away with a higher level of respect for the family and what it accomplished than I had before I read the book.

I've been to New Iberia but I don't know the town very well. I would be surprised that openly gay relationships were very common until at least in recent years. However, I find it hard to believe that vegetarians had to stay in the closet with them.

I have relatives from that area, mostly the Lafayette to Eunice part of the state and I've been there many, many times. The book did not seem unbelievable to me at all when it came to the mores of the area and what the people are like.

Now, would you please disclose why you are so passionate about the book and are attacking it with such a vengeance? I'm assuming that you are a family member who feels embarrassed or ticked off for some reason. I'm not asking your name, but I think you owe it to the rest of us to explain your motives a bit.

Also, rcr, I see you link as more of an attempt at character assassination than a legitimate criticism of the book. The book and what happened ten years ago in the other situation have nothing to do with each other at all.

Let's discuss the book and not something that its author was criticized for a decade ago.

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